Abstract

ObjectiveTo develop the medication literacy scale for patients with hypertension, and to test the reliability and validity of the scale.MethodsThe initial draft of the scale was formulated based on the operationalization of medication literacy with four core elements of knowledge, attitude, skill, and practice, and was developed through procedures of literature review, interviews to hypertensive patients, and research group discussion. Expert panel meeting, interviews, and pre-test on the initial draft of the scale to 10 hypertensive patients, as well as a two iterations of expert feedback were used to form a primary medication literacy scale for pilot investigation and item selection. In this study, 260 patients with hypertension in Changsha city of China were purposively selected to conduct a pilot survey using the primary medication literacy scale. After item selection by a series of statistical analysis method and item re-wording according to patients’ feedback, the scale was revised to form a formal investigation scale with four domains and 37 items. A formal investigation was carried out on 650 patients with hypertension selected purposively in a tertiary general hospital and two community health service centers in Changsha city of China. The reliability and validity of the scale were analyzed.ResultsFinally, the formal scale consists of four domains on knowledge, attitude, practice and skills, 11 sub-factors and 37 items in total. The scale-level content validity index (S-CVI/Ave) of this scale was 0.968, and the I-CVI for each item ranged from 0.833 to 1.000, indicating a good and acceptable content and face validity. The Cronbach’s α coefficient was 0.849 for the overall scale and ranged from 0.744 to 0.783 for domains. The Pearson’s correlation coefficients between domains and the total scale were ranging from 0.530 to 0.799. Besides, the Pearson’s correlation coefficient among domains of the scale ranged from 0.157 to 0.439. The Spearman-Brown split-half reliability coefficient was 0.893 for the total scale and ranged from 0.793 to 0.872 for domains. The test-retest reliability coefficient of the total scale was 0.968 and ranged from 0.880 to 0.959 for domains. Four domains of knowledge, attitude, skill, and practice were identified through the exploratory factor analysis and confirmatory factor analysis from each domain. The total explained variation of domains for the overall scale was 51.420%. Eleven sub-factors for domains were extracted through respective exploratory factor analysis from each domain, and the total explained variation of sub-factors for its belonging domain were ranging from 56.111 to 64.419%. The confirmatory factor analysis showed the fit indices of the four-domain model were as follows (χ2/df=2.629, GFI=0.804, AGFI=0.777, RMR=0.012, IFI=0.746, RMSEA=0.066, PNFI=0.599, PCFI=0.689), which indicated an acceptable model fit.ConclusionsThe medication literacy scale for hypertensive patients has good reliability and acceptable validity, which is suitable and acceptable for evaluating the medication literacy level of hypertension patients in China. In the future, further construct and model fit validation and English translation with appropriate adaptation of this whole scale are required, so that this scale can be further validated and applied worldwide.

Highlights

  • Medication safety problem has always been the focus of healthcare providers and public health community scholars

  • The primary medication literacy scale for hypertensive patients with 39 items for pilot survey has been formed after 2 items being excluded according to suggestions generated from the two-round expert consultation

  • ML, medication literacy; K, knowledge domain; A, attitude domain; P, practice domain; S, skill domain. This is the first study to develop a self-reporting medication literacy scale specific for hypertensive patients (MLSHP), which is aimed at exploring the psychometric properties of MLSHP in Chinese hypertensive patients

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Summary

Introduction

Medication safety problem has always been the focus of healthcare providers and public health community scholars. Researches across the globe reported that there were certain safety problems in medication taking process for hypertensive patients (Liu et al, 2016; Rahmawati and Bajorek, 2017). This present study was referred to and complied with Pouliot’s study on conceptualization of medication literacy. In Pouliot’s study, patient’s beliefs and personal circumstances were considered into the medication literacy conceptualization, it was a two-way dialogue between patients and their healthcare providers about the benefits, risks, and alternatives of treatment, in order to achieve optimal goal and outcomes of individual’s medication literacy (Pouliot et al, 2018). Hypertensive patients’ attitudes, including their beliefs related to hypertension severity and susceptibility, their beliefs to the effectiveness or necessity of taking antihypertensive medication, as well as their self-efficacy in hypertension disease management, were incorporated into the conceptualization and operationalization of hypertensive patients’ medication literacy

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